Guest guest Posted December 4, 2001 Report Share Posted December 4, 2001 http://www.charleston.net/pub/news/local/bluelight1204.htm Blue lights honor fallen police officers Tuesday, December 4, 2001 BY GLENN SMITH Of The Post and Courier Staff The holidays are always a time of mixed emotions for North ton Detective Bill O'Brien. Amid the Christmas cheer, there is also a pervasive sense of loss. Less than two weeks before Christmas in 1992, his brother, Highway Patrol Trooper Hunter O'Brien, was killed in the line of duty when a truck struck his cruiser in Beaufort County. He was just 24. As the anniversary of his brother's death approaches, O'Brien finds some solace whenever he passes a home with a blue light shining in a window. It is a sign that someone out there remembers. This holiday season, people across the nation are being encouraged to display blue lights as a tribute to police officers killed in the line of duty and to honor those who still serve. The effort is known as " Project Blue Light. " " It shows community support for law enforcement and it makes the survivors feel like the loss of their loved one wasn't in vain, " O'Brien said. " It shows that people do actually appreciate it. " Project Blue Light began in 1989 when a Philadelphia woman placed blue lights in her window in memory of her daughter, who had recently died in a car accident, and her son-in-law, a police officer who died in the line of duty in 1986. The idea caught on and spread across the nation. O'Brien and others are trying to generate more participation in the Lowcountry. Though the idea isn't new, he suspects many people have never heard of Project Blue Light. Sally Guerry, president of the South Carolina chapter of Concerns of Police Survivors, said she hopes the effort will benefit from the greater attention paid to the work of police and firefighters since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Her organization, which assists the surviving families of fallen officers, is also encouraging people to tie blue ribbons on their car antennas as a tribute to those who have died. Guerry said such simple displays make a big difference to the officers' families. Her husband, town police Maj. Spencer Guerry, died in 1994 after a man shot him during a traffic stop. " It gives you a warm feeling when you see (the blue lights), " she said. " It's very comforting to know people care. " Glenn covers police and crime. Contact him at 937-5556 or at gsmith@.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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